John Gilbert BrogdenAM (born 28 March 1969) is an Australian businessman and former politician. He joined the Australian Institute of Company Directors as Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer in January 2015. He is Chairman of Lifeline Australia, Chairman of UrbanGrowth NSW, and Chairman of the Broken Bay Institute. He is a director of NIA.

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Brogden was born in Balmain and raised in Sydney. His father Gilbert Arthur Brogden, a carpenter, was born in Taranaki, New Zealand in 1933 and emigrated to Australia in 1960. His mother, Judith Anne (née Bourne), was a secretary He was educated at St Joan of Arc, Haberfield, St Patrick's College, Strathfield and the University of Sydney where he gained a Master of Public Affairs (MPA).[citation needed]

His wife Lucy is an organisational psychologist, Patron of Partners in Depression and Patron of the Sydney Women's Fund. They have three children.[1][2]

John Brogden joined the Liberal Party in his final year of high school in 1986. Between 1989 and 1994 he was an adviser to Attorney General John Hannaford, Premier John Fahey and Police Minister Ted Pickering. From 1992 to 1993 he was President of the NSW Division of the Young Liberals, and a member of the NSW Division's state executive. In 1994, he served a year as Treasurer of the Young Liberal Movement of Australia. He rejoined state executive in 1995 elected as a Metropolitan Representative.

From 1994 to 1995 Brogden was a consultant at public affairs company Cosway Australia. From 1995 to 1996 he was a Senior Adviser at the credit union services corporation (CUSCAL).

Brogden was elected to the NSW Legislative Assembly as the Member for Pittwater in May 1996 in a by election following the resignation of former Fahey Government Minister Jim Longley. In 1999 he was promoted to the Shadow Ministry as the Shadow Minister for Urban Affairs and Planning, Sydney Water and Youth Affairs.

In the leadup to the 2003 election, Opposition Leader Kerry Chikarovski was struggling in the polls against Premier Bob Carr. On 25 March 2002, Brogden announced a challenge. Three days later on 28 March 2002,[3] he succeeded in a 15–14 vote, becoming the youngest ever leader of a state or federal Liberal Party.[citation needed] On becoming Opposition Leader, he resigned from his previous portfolios, but took on the new shadow ministries of Ethnic Affairs and Treasury.

At the 2003 election the Liberal won one seat from Labor and lost one to Labor. Notwithstanding the electoral defeat, Brogden improved his and the party's standing in the polls over the next two years. For part of 2005 the Coalition was in front of Labor[citation needed], with many people believing that Brogden would win the 2007 election, especially when Bob Carr resigned from politics and Morris Iemma was elected as the new Premier.[4]

Meanwhile Brogden confronted the government over a number of issues, often focussing on health and police corruption. He aggressively pursued the Carr government over its involvement in the Orange Grove affair, in which a shopping centre was shut down, allegedly for zoning reasons, amidst claims of political pressure from The Westfield Group, which ran a neighbouring shopping centre. In October 2004, Westfield launched defamation action against Brogden as a result of comments he made about the affair.[citation needed]

Despite the improvement in the opposition's opinion-poll ratings during 2004 and early 2005, Brogden's hopes that he would gain the premiership in 2007 were not to be fulfilled. He came under fire for offensive behaviour at a function in Sydney on 29 July 2005. At this function, he was quoted by the media as having described Helena Carr, the Premier's Malaysian-born wife, as a "mail-order bride".[5] More specifically, Brogden said Carr could "ship his mail-order bride back to where she came from, for all I care". Brogden later publicly apologised for this remark.[6] He was also accused of unwelcome sexual advances to two unnamed female journalists at the same function (ABC's Lateline reported that he "propositioned" one journalist, and pinched another's buttocks).[5] Brogden alleged that Alex Hawke (a future Liberal member of the federal parliament) was responsible for leaking information to the media.[7]

As a result of the controversy, Brogden resigned as Leader of the NSW Opposition on 29 August. Nevertheless he announced his intention to remain as the Member for Pittwater.[8][9]

The next day, 30 August, police attended Brogden's electorate office at around 10.30 pm, after concerns were raised by members of his family. They found him apparently unconscious in a back room, having slit his wrists, apparently in a drug- and alcohol-induced stupor.[10][11]

When the Sydney Morning Herald called Liberal frontbencher Barry O'Farrell at about 11 pm to question him about possible leadership contention, he told them, "Excuse me if I say I don't care about the leadership at the moment, but I am following an ambulance with John Brogden inside. He has attempted self-harm. It sort of puts things in perspective, doesn't it?".[12][13]

Brogden was taken to Royal North Shore Hospital that night, and discharged the following day into respite care at a nearby psychiatric facility. The Sydney Morning Herald reported that Brogden's actions were a suicide attempt. On 1 September, Brogden and his wife issued a short statement thanking people who had sent messages of support, and inviting people wishing to help further to donate to beyondblue, an anti-depression organisation.[14]

It was on 28 September that Brogden left the legislature. A by-election was held for the seat of Pittwater, and this was won by an independent candidate, Alex McTaggart.[15][16] At the 2007 state election McTaggert was defeated by Liberal candidate Robert Gordon Stokes, a former adviser to Brogden.

In January 2015, he joined the Australian Institute of Company Directors as Managing Director and Chief Executive Officer. He is responsible for leading the overall organisation, representing directors on policy issues, maintaining excellence in education and building stakeholder understanding of directorship and governance.

From 2010 to 2012 he was a director of the Sydney Ports Corporation. In 2012 he was appointed Chairman of the NSW Government's land development corporation Landcom, which was renamed UrbanGrowth NSW in 2013. In 2011 he joined the board of start up health insurer NIA (health.com.au), the 2013 Testra Start Up Business of the Year.

In 2012 he joined the board of the Broken Bay Institute as Chairman.

In 2007, Brogden became the first Patron of Australia's telephone suicide counselling service Lifeline NSW.[18] In April 2011, he became National Patron for Lifeline.[19] In 2012 he was elected Chairman of Lifeline Australia.

John Brogden also holds honorary positions as the Patron of Sailability Pittwater, Bilgola Surf Lifesaving Club and Avalon Beach Surf Lifesaving Club and is the Chairman of Furlough House Retirement Village.[20]